Signor Blitz


Signor Blitz (born Antonio van Zandt, 21 June 1810 Deal, Kent, England – 28 January 1877 Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States) was a British magician and performer.[1]

Career as a magician

van Zandt started performing at the age of thirteen in Hamburg, Germany,[2] billed as Signor Blitz.[1] After traveling for two years in northern Europe, he returned to England, appearing first in Dover in December 1825. He then visited Ireland and Scotland. In 1834, he went to the United States,[3] and, after performing in New York City, traveled throughout that country. Later he visited Canada and the West Indies. On his return from the south he settled in Philadelphia, where he resided until his death.[4]

One of Signor Blitz's best-known performances was a trick in which a loaded gun was pointed at him and he would catch the bullet in his hands. However, he stopped showing it because of the risky nature of the trick.[1] He also combined ventriloquism during his long show making quips with his dummy (Bobby) as well as making sound effects.

Personal life

He married and had four children. After his first wife died, he married again in 1863.[2]

Autobiography

Blitz wrote the autobiography Fifty Years in the Magic Circle.[2][5]

Death

Six years after writing his autobiography, he died in his home in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

gollark: I once made traffic lights which shot anything moving too fast with lasers, but didn't exempt lasers from being lased, that was fun.
gollark: > The frickin' laser beam fires a bolt of superheated plasma, a softnose laser, or some other handwavey science. This powerful projectile can deal incredible damage to mobs and blocks alike.So apparently it does lampshade it, yes.
gollark: Is that really a *wiki* though?
gollark: Well, apparently the wiki.cc.cc search doesn't work.
gollark: If science™ mattered lasers would be actual beams which travelled at light speed and without the weird range limits.

References

  1. Tieteen kuvalehti Historia 11/2013, s. 77.
  2. "The New York Times". Query.nytimes.com. 29 January 1877. Retrieved 1 March 2019.
  3. Wilson & Fiske 1900.
  4. Fifty Years in the Magic Circle. Hartford. 1871.

Sources

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